This article is written by a Japanese local.
In the business world, the demand for foreign designers with a global sensibility and unique skills is rapidly increasing.
However, when applying for the “Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services” visa to welcome them into a company, design-related roles are known as one of the most difficult hurdles with the highest risk of denial. No matter how highly your company evaluates their portfolio and is convinced that they are an “excellent designer,” the visa will be mercilessly denied if the application does not fit the screening logic of the Immigration Services Agency.
This article thoroughly explains the realities of the traps companies easily fall into—such as being deemed a “job mismatch” or “simple labor”—and how to structure an objective employment plan and logical proof to reliably pass the screening.
1. The Discrepancy Risk Between the Title “Designer” and Actual Duties
Immigration examiners do not evaluate glamorous job titles like “Designer” or “Creator” written on an employment contract at all. What they scrutinize with extreme strictness is the “resolution of the specific daily job duties.”
The work visa only permits duties requiring highly professional and intellectual proficiency acquired at a university or similar institution. If “on-site manual tasks” accompanying the design work exceed a certain percentage, it will immediately be judged as “Simple Labor (Illegal Labor).”
Criteria for “Simple Labor” that Directly Lead to Denial
- Apparel & Fashion: Applying as “Clothing Planning/Design,” but the actual duties include serving customers in the company’s retail store, stocking inventory, or doing simple sewing and alteration work using a sewing machine.
- Web & Graphic: When the main duties are not art direction or UI/UX design, but DTP operator tasks (simply inputting text as instructed by others) or cutting and packaging printed materials.
- Interior & Spatial: Not doing spatial concept design or CAD drafting, but being engaged in bringing materials into an actual construction site or performing on-site construction and assembly work.
Even if the company intends this as a “training period to learn the field,” the visa will not be approved if Immigration determines that these are the main duties.
2. The Strict Link Between “University Major” and “Assigned Duties”
The most fatal mistake in a designer’s screening is the lack of a clear logical connection between the applicant’s “major” at a university or vocational school and the “actual duties” they will handle at the company.
Compromising under the broad umbrella of “Design” is not permitted. Immigration examines the submitted academic transcripts (syllabus) in detail and demands a perfect match between the completed courses and the practical work.
- NG Example (Denial): Hiring personnel who majored in “Architectural Design/Environmental Design” as a “Web/UI/UX Designer” at an IT company.
- NG Example (Denial): Assigning personnel with a degree in “Fine Arts (Oil Painting, etc.)” to handle “Industrial Product Design” or “Mechanical Design.”
- OK Example (Potential Approval): Hiring personnel who majored in “Visual Communication Design” as an “Art Director in the Web Marketing Department.”
A precise logical argument is required to explain exactly which process of the assigned project will utilize each course listed on the transcript (e.g., color theory, ergonomics, digital modeling, typography).
3. Objective Proof (Due Diligence) Required from the Company
To completely eliminate the risks of job mismatches and simple labor, the hiring company must build objective evidence that satisfies the following elements and present it to Immigration.
① Creation of an Advanced Job Description
Avoid ambiguous descriptions like “general design duties.” Clearly state how the work requires a marketing perspective and highly intellectual judgment, such as “concept design based on target audience analysis,” “UI/UX wireframe construction,” or “art direction in line with brand guidelines.”
② Submission of an “Organizational Chart” and “Photos” Proving the Corporate Structure
Verbally claiming “this foreigner will not do simple labor” is not evidence. You must submit a detailed organizational chart showing that separate staff—such as “store sales staff,” “print operators,” or “sewing staff”—are clearly assigned to perform simple tasks so the applicant can focus on design. Attaching photos of a dedicated work desk equipped with a PC and design software (like Adobe products) is also powerful physical evidence.
③ Attachment of a Portfolio
Although not a legally required document, submitting a portfolio of the applicant’s past designs is highly effective. It visually appeals directly to the examiner, proving that “the knowledge learned at university has been sublimated into such a highly advanced output.”
4. [Exception] Hiring a Designer Based Solely on Practical Experience
If the targeted foreigner does not have a design-related degree from a university or vocational school, you must generally prove “10 or more years of practical experience” with Certificates of Employment. However, for fashion or interior design duties, the law recognizes an exception: because these fall under the “International Services” category, the requirement can be met with “3 or more years of practical experience.”
5. Practical Q&A on Hiring Designers
- Q: Can we have them train as a retail sales staff in our store for the first six months so they understand the brand’s frontline?
A: Extremely high risk. The work visa is premised on “immediately engaging in the permitted professional duties.” Performing customer service and sales (simple labor) for six months is considered an activity outside the permitted scope, and the visa will not be approved. Field training must be kept to a minimum (a few weeks), and you must clearly explain in the Employment Reason Statement that the main duties are design and planning at the headquarters. - Q: They graduated with a Business Administration degree but learned design on their own and have a fantastic portfolio. Can we hire them as a designer on a work visa?
A: In principle, it is impossible. The work visa uses “the connection between academic background (major) and job duties” as an absolute screening criterion, not “the person’s current skills.” For a business graduate, you must restructure the legal approach by obtaining the visa for duties like marketing or overseas sales, and having them handle design “as part of” those primary duties.
Hiring a foreign designer cannot be achieved solely based on the company’s subjective “evaluation of talent.” Working backward from Immigration’s strict screening logic, an “objective employment plan” where educational background, job duties, and corporate structure are completely logically integrated is essential. Before making a job offer and bringing them into a project, conduct a strict audit to uncover all facts and ensure your hiring plan perfectly meets the legal requirements.